Ormus,Monatomic Gold is it an Anti-Ageing Alchemical Elixir?

The accidental discovery of single atom elements by a Phoenix-area cotton farmer in the 1970s may have opened the door to limitless free energy, a cure for AIDS and cancer, longevity, faster-than-light speeds and much more, perhaps even inter-dimensional and time travel. And, while his discovery has been amazing to modern science, it's really nothing new.

Today, several scholars have linked this amazing discovery to the mythology and legends of the far distant past, especially in ancient Mesopotamia today known as Iraq. As stated in Ecclesiastes 1:9 (New International), "What has been will be again, what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the sun."

Interest in this new technology grew rapidly and by mid-2003, some researchers were even claiming that the invasion of Iraq made have had more to do with this new discovery than with oil, weapons of mass destruction or regime change.

This story of amazing new discoveries, their connection with narratives from the ancient past and the possible role all this plays in current world events is gaining more and more interest. Such elemental secrets apparently were lost centuries ago. Vestiges of this knowledge may have been passed down through the years by a series of secret societies.

It all began with David Hudson, a self-styled conservative Republican and cotton farmer from Phoenix, Arizona. By the mid-1970s, Hudson had found farming in the parched baked soil there a hard scrabble. He began to look for other means of making a living even as he began injecting sulphuric acid into the soil in an effort to break up the dry crust. He found that by spraying his soil samples with a cyanide solution, he could obtain traces of metals from the ore, including gold.

"[W]e had been doing soils analysis [when we thought of] this concept of literally piling ore up on a piece of plastic and spraying it with a cyanide solution, which dissolves selectively the gold out of the ore," Hudson told a Dallas audience in 1995. "It trickles down through the ore until it hits the plastic and then runs out of the plastic into the settling pond. It's pumped up through activated charcoal where the gold adheres to the charcoal and then the solution is returned to the stack...The concept seemed pretty simple. I decided, you know a lot of farmers have airplanes, a lot of farmers have race horses, a lot of farmers have race cars...I decided I was going to have a gold mine."

After checking out several locations, including abandoned gold mines, Hudson found the site near Phoenix he was seeking. "I had a lot of earth movers and water trucks and road graders and backhoes and caterpillars and these kinds of things on the farm and I had equipment operators, so I decided I was going to set up one of these heap leach cyanide systems."

Hudson got much more than he had bargained for.

"[W]e began recovering the gold and silver and we would take the charcoal down to our farm. We'd strip it with hot cyanide and sodium hydroxide. We'd run it through an 'electro-winning cell' to get the gold out. And then we would do what's called a 'fire assay,' where you run it through a crucible reduction to get this gold and silver bead....This is the time honored procedure for recovering gold and silver and, basically, its been performed for 250-300 years. It's the accepted standard in the industry," he explained.

But, along with small amounts of gold and silver, Hudson also recovered small beads of a material which baffled attempts at analysis. "Something was recovering with the gold and silver [that] we couldn't explain," he said. This "something" turned out to be elements heretofore unknown to modern science, elements composed of a single atom. This monatomic matter is found in virtually everything around us including the food we eat and the water we drink.

Hudson found such elements could be retrieved from noble metals such as gold, silver, copper, cobalt and nickel along with platinum, palladium, rhodium, iridium, ruthenium and osmium. He also found that the nuclei of such monatomic matter acted in an unusual manner. Under certain circumstances, they began spinning and creating oddly deformed shapes. Oddly, as these nuclei spun they began to come apart on their own.

It was found, for example, than in the element Rhodium 103, the nucleus became deformed in a ratio of two to one, twice as long as it is wide like a Coke bottle and entered a high spin state. "It's inherent in the stuff," noted Hudson. "It isn't anything you do from the outside."

After a two-year study of this material, an Arizona analytical chemist informed Hudson, "I can, without equivalence, tell you that it is not any of the other elements on the Periodic Table." Referring to one sample, the chemist said, "What we have here is something that I know is pure rhodium and yet none of these spectroscopic analyzes are saying it's rhodium...This makes absolutely no sense at all. This is defying everything I have been taught in college, everything I have been taught in graduate school. I'm going to send this back to my graduate professors at Iowa State."

However, the learned men at the university could not identify the material within the sample. A sample was passed to Harwell Laboratories in Oxfordshire, England, for neutron activation analysis but they too failed to identify the element.

Hudson finally found a source of information in the Soviet Academy of Sciences in Russia. Through specialized equipment, scientists there determined that his mysterious white substance was composed entirely of platinum group metals in a form previously unknown to modern science.

Something quite new and unusual was revealing itself.

Working with United Technologies, Hudson's new material was placed in newly-developed fuel cells. Although analysis showed the material contained no rhodium, when mounted on carbon and placed in a fuel cell, it performed as only rhodium could.

Hudson was told that if he could explain how to obtain his strange white powder from commercially available material, he could patent the process. In 1988, he did just that, filing both U.S. and worldwide patents on 11 monatomic elements.

He coined the term "Orbitally Rearranged Monatomic Elements" or ORMEs to describe this new found matter. Such material in a pure monatomic state forms a snow white powdery substance, in appearance not unlike ordinary cooking flour.

Then the study of this odd material took an even stranger turn.

"The amazing thing about it," explained Hudson, "is the weight of the material. It was very difficult to weigh....They want things very precise at the patent office [but] we couldn't get consistent results with the material. It kept gaining weight and gaining weight."

Using thermo-gravimetric analysis, it was found that when samples of the material were reduced to the white powder state, it lost 44 percent of its original weight. By either heating or cooling the material, it would gain weight or lose weight. "By repeated annealing we could make the material weigh less than the pan weighed it was sitting in," said Hudson. "...or we could make it weigh 300-400 times what its beginning weight was depending on whether we were heating or cooling it. ...if you take this white powder and put it on a quartz boat and heat it up to the point where it fuses with the quartz, it becomes black and it regains all its weight again. This makes no sense, it's impossible, it can't happen. But there it is."

By the early 1990s, scientific papers were being published by the Niels Bohr Institute and Argonne National and Oak Ridge National Laboratories substantiating the existence of these high-spin, monatomic elements and their power as superconductors. Hudson also met with Dr. Hal Puthoff, director of the Institute for Advanced Studies in Austin, Texas. Puthoff, who performs cutting-edge research into zero-point energy and gravity as a zero-point fluctuation force, had already theorized that matter reacting in two dimensions should lose about 44 percent of its gravitational weight, exactly the weight loss found by Hudson.

When it was found that Hudson's elements, when heated, could achieve a gravitational attraction of less than zero, Puhoff concluded the powder was "exotic matter" capable of bending time and space. The material's anti-gravitational properties were confirmed when it was shown that a weighing pan weighed less when the power was placed in it than it did empty. The matter had passed its anti-gravitational properties to the pan.

Adding to their amazement, it was found that when the white powder was heated to a certain degree, not only did its weight disappear but the powder itself vanished from sight. When a spatula was used to stir around in the pan, there apparently was nothing there. Yet, as the material cooled, it reappeared in the same configuration was when originally placed in the pan. The material had not simply disappeared, it had moved into another dimensional plane.

As if all this were not magical enough, a relative directed Hudson to a book on alchemy. Being a practical man, a farmer and metallurgist, Hudson disdained any reference to the occult. But he quickly became intrigued by the similarities between his newly-discovered monatomic elements and accounts from the past.

Alchemy is the centuries-old attempt to discover the relationship between a human and the universe and to benefit from an understanding of the basics of life. Alchemical theory determined that some substance must exist that could bring about the transmutation of certain metals. Foremost among these metals was gold. This mysterious catalyst was sometimes referred to as "the tincture," but more often as "the powder." This term, as it passed from the Arabic language into Latin, became known as the "elixir of life" and more commonly as the "Philosopher's Stone."

According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, this stone "which is not a stone" was sometimes called "a medicine for the rectification of `base' or `sick' metals, and from this it was a short step to view it as a drug for the rectification of human maladies." This view was confirmed by Eirenaeus Philalethes, a 17th-century alchemist, who wrote, "Our Stone is nothing but gold digested to the highest degree of purity and subtle fixation..."

Everyone knows of the alchemists' search for the formula of changing base metals into gold but few have wonder why exactly they wanted gold. It has been assumed the alchemists wanted riches. But a close study of alchemy and occultism reveals that these men and women of the past were attempting to recover ancient knowledge long since lost in the mists of time.

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Brendan Georgeson has been an Alchemist since 1987, his company Alchemical Elixirs creates Ormus, White Powder Gold and Monatomic Gold Elixirs for Naturopaths, Homeopaths and Alternative Health Practioners World Wide, He has many International Celebrity Clients, and his Alchemical Elixirs are known to be the Finest on the Planet. for more information see http://www.alchemicalelixirs.comBrendan Georgeson has been an Alchemist since 1987, his company Alchemical Elixirs creates Ormus, White Powder Gold and Monatomic Gold Elixirs for Naturopaths, Homeopaths and Alternative Health Practioners World Wide, He has many International Celebrity Clients, and his Alchemical Elixirs are known to be the Finest on the Planet. for more information see http://www.alchemicalelixirs.com